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Ghost Ring Disguise Comb Knife - Matte Black

Price:

3.99


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Ghost Ring Covert Comb Knife - Matte Black

https://www.texasautomaticknives.com/web/image/product.template/751/image_1920?unique=2e88ddf

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This covert comb knife hides a fixed hawkbill blade behind a matte black comb cover and locks into your hand with a karambit-style ring. It’s not an automatic knife, OTF knife, or switchblade—it’s a disguised fixed blade built for control. In a Texas glovebox, gym bag, or ranch kit, it rides like a simple comb until purpose calls. Collectors who appreciate clever mechanisms and honest steel will recognize this as the sleeper in the lineup.

3.99 3.99 USD 3.99

CK2BK

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  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
  • Closed Length (inches)
  • Weight (oz.)
  • Blade Color
  • Handle Finish
  • Concealed Length (inches)
  • Concealment Type

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Blade Length (inches) 3
Overall Length (inches) 7.5
Closed Length (inches) 4.5
Weight (oz.) 1.16
Blade Color Silver
Handle Finish Matte
Concealed Length (inches) 4.5
Concealment Type Comb

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Some knives brag the moment you pull them from your pocket. This one minds its business. The Ghost Ring Covert Comb Knife looks like a plain matte black comb until you slip the cover free and that fixed hawkbill blade and karambit-style ring settle into your hand. It isn’t an automatic knife, it isn’t an OTF knife, and it isn’t a switchblade. It’s a disguised fixed comb knife that trades flash for quiet control—a different kind of tool for a Texas buyer who already knows the difference.

What a Comb Knife Really Is—and What It Isn’t

This piece starts life as a comb knife: a fixed blade hidden inside a believable everyday object. There’s no spring, no button, no slider. You remove the matte black comb cover, and the 3-inch silver hawkbill blade is simply there, locked in by the ring. That makes it closer to a compact fixed blade than any automatic knife or OTF knife. For Texas collectors who care about mechanism, that clarity matters more than marketing buzzwords.

Where a switchblade or OTF knife sells the deployment show, this comb knife sells the disguise. It hides among grooming gear, glovebox odds and ends, or in a range bag pocket without advertising itself. The story here isn’t speed from a spring; it’s plausibility until the moment you need a controlled, anchored edge.

Comb Knife Mechanics: Fixed Edge, Karambit Control

Mechanically, the Ghost Ring is simple and honest. Under the comb cover is a fixed hawkbill blade set into a ring-handled frame. You don’t flip, flick, or fire it like an automatic knife or OTF knife. You just draw the comb, slip the cover off, and your index or ring finger drops through the karambit-style ring. That single motion gives you retention, orientation, and leverage.

Hawkbill geometry for pull cuts and control

The curved hawkbill edge focuses pressure along the inside of the arc, making it ideal for pull cuts—rope, tape, plastic wrap, banding, and similar material. On a comb knife, that curve turns an unassuming object into a serious cutting tool without growing the footprint. It cuts like a work knife while it rides like a comb.

Ring retention when stress kills fine motor skills

Ask any Texas ranch hand or first responder: when adrenaline hits, small handles get slippery. The ring on this comb knife is the answer to that. Once your finger is locked in, orientation is automatic and grip is hard to lose. That’s a different kind of confidence than you get from a switchblade or OTF knife—less about spectacle, more about staying in your hand when it counts.

Comb Knife vs Automatic Knife, OTF Knife, and Switchblade

Collectors in Texas don’t like fuzzy language, and this piece rewards a buyer who knows their terms. An automatic knife uses a spring and button to snap the blade open from the side. An OTF knife drives the blade straight out the front with a slider or trigger. A switchblade is the legal catch-all that usually refers to those automatic mechanisms. This comb knife does none of that—it’s a disguised fixed blade that happens to live inside a comb-shaped sheath.

Because there’s no moving mechanism, there’s nothing to gum up, fail, or clog with pocket grit the way an OTF knife sometimes can. Compared to an automatic knife, there’s no accidental partial deployment to worry about at the bottom of a bag. Compared to a classic switchblade, you’re gaining deep disguise at the cost of one extra step: slide off the cover, then work.

For the Texas buyer who already owns a few autos and maybe one good OTF, this comb knife fills a different slot: the piece that stays invisible until it has to stop being polite.

Texas Carry Reality: A Disguised Fixed Blade in the Real World

Texas law has come a long way on knives, including automatic knives and even many switchblade-style designs, but it still pays to know what you’re carrying. This comb knife is a disguised fixed blade with a 3-inch edge. It doesn’t flip or fire like an automatic knife or OTF knife, which keeps you out of the spring-assisted discussion, but you should still treat it with the same respect you give a small fixed blade.

In practical Texas terms, this is a glovebox tool, a backpack companion, or a low-profile EDC piece that doesn’t scream “weapon” on sight. It slides into a ranch truck console between maps and receipts, tucks into a gym bag, or rides in a work pouch beside tape and zip ties. The comb cover keeps teeth functional enough to straighten your hair after a long shift, but its real job is to keep that edge out of view and under control.

If you’re comparing it to an automatic knife for Texas carry, think about context. Autos and OTF knives are knives first; everyone around you recognizes them as such. This comb knife is an everyday object first, hidden edge second. Same Texas sky, different social footprint.

Field Specs for Texas Collectors: Size, Weight, and Disguise

The numbers tell a story Texas collectors can appreciate. Overall length is 7.5 inches with the blade bared, giving you enough reach for real work without pushing it into oversized territory. Closed under the comb cover, length drops to 4.5 inches, which fits neatly into most organizer pockets, tackle boxes, or truck console trays.

The 3-inch silver hawkbill blade rides light at just 1.16 ounces total weight. That’s key for all-day carry in Texas heat—no sagging pockets, no heavy pull on gym shorts, no reason to leave it behind. The matte black comb cover keeps reflections down and suspicion lower. Teeth are fine enough to sell the grooming story, and the lanyard hole at the corner gives you options for tethering, hanging in a shop, or merchandising on a peg wall.

Why this comb knife earns a place next to your autos

Most Texas collectors already own an automatic knife or two, maybe a dedicated OTF knife, and at least one sentimental switchblade. This comb knife doesn’t try to replace any of them. It earns its slot because it answers a different question: what do you reach for when you want an honest edge hiding in plain sight?

The karambit-style ring, the hawkbill profile, the believable comb disguise—they add up to a niche tool that feels thought-through, not gimmicky. It’s the one you hand to a friend and watch the grin when they realize that “comb” isn’t just for hair.

What Texas Buyers Ask About Comb Knives

Is a comb knife like an automatic knife, OTF knife, or switchblade?

No. A comb knife like this one is a disguised fixed blade. There’s no spring, no auto button, and no OTF-style slider. You pull the comb, slip the cover off, and the blade is already locked in by the ring. For Texas buyers trying to stay clear about terms, this sits in the hidden or novelty fixed-blade category, not the automatic or switchblade lane.

Are comb knives legal to carry in Texas?

Texas law is generally knife-friendly, including many automatic knives and even traditional switchblade patterns, but details can shift and local rules can differ. This comb knife is under 3.5 inches of edge and has no spring mechanism, so it usually lives in the same world as other small fixed blades. That said, it’s disguised, which can raise extra questions in sensitive locations. If you’re carrying in schools, courthouses, or restricted areas, check current Texas statutes and local policies instead of assuming.

Why would a collector choose a comb knife over another auto or OTF?

Because at some point, another automatic knife or OTF knife feels like more of the same. A serious Texas collector looks for story and purpose. This comb knife brings both: genuine disguise, a ring that actually works under stress, and a hawkbill edge tuned for pull cuts. It’s a talking piece that still earns its keep on rope, tape, and packaging—something different in a drawer full of springs and sliders.

In a state where folks know the difference between an automatic knife, an OTF knife, and a switchblade, a comb knife like the Ghost Ring Covert stands out by not pretending to be any of them. It’s a quiet, fixed-edge tool that hides in plain sight, lives easy in a Texas truck or tackle box, and tells its story in one clean motion: cover off, finger through, edge working. If that sounds like your kind of honesty, this is the piece that belongs beside your favorites.